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Written by Administrator
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Wednesday, 29 October 2008 08:17 |
Benefits of Parks and Recreation “Benefits of Park and Recreation” – A consortium of facts gathered by People for Parks in its continuing effort to present the benefits of park and recreation on communities it serves. Addressing the livability aspects that are the basis for our competitiveness and economic growth in East Multnomah County.“The Economic Benefits of Parks and Open Space” – How Land Conservation Helps Communities Grow Smart and Protect the Bottom LineBenefits of WalkingBenefits of TrailsBenefits of Physical Activity – Link to NRPA web page1998 Recreation Roundtable Survey“Economic Benefits of Parks and Open Space”: How Land Conservation Helps Communities Grow Smart and Protect the Bottom Line – “Do Trails Affect Public Safety and Property Values?” Trail Effects on Neighborhoods: Home Value, Safety, Quality of Life“A New Era in Play” - by Reed Karaim, USA Weekend, “How Kids Play Today – What’s Good, What’s Not”, December 16, 2007Some Documented Facts from the National Recreation and Park Association (NRPA)
Additional research on the benefits of park and recreation can be found at the following links: GENERAL BENEFITS OF PARKShttp://www.tpl.org/content_documents/parks_for_people_Jul2005.pdfThe Public Value of Parks: http://www.urban.org/url.cfm?ID=311011 People's Perceptions of Parks and Recreation: <http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1145/is_12_39/ai_n9532112> The Meaning of Place / Place Meaning: <http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1145/is_8_35/ai_65132248> WHAT PEOPLE WANT FROM PARKS AND RECREATIONSan Francisco-RPD / Younger Recreation Survey 2004HEALTH BENEFITS OF PARKS & RECREATION - San Francisco Shape Up Coalition
- http://www.parkweb.vic.gov.au/1process_content.cfm?section=99&page=16
- Center for Disease Control - Active Community Environments (ACEs) is a CDC-sponsored initiative to promote walking, bicycling, and the development of accessible recreation facilities.
- Australian Healthy Parks, Healthy People Initiative
- The Influence of Community Factors on Health
- Kids Walk to School
- U.S. Obesity Trends 1985 to 2006
- Diabetes Trends Among Adults in the U.S
- Physical Activity helps prevent problems of aging
- U.S. students at age 11 are in the top third of countries for frequent television watching, with 34 percent of girls and 36 percent of boys reporting that they watch four or more hours of television per day.
Read more about the Health of U.S. Youth - Of the total Asian adults in San Francisco, 28.1% are overweight, and 43.2% are physically inactive.
Read more here. - NPC cited as a San Francisco resource for disease prevention and public health interventions that work.
- Teens Living in Disadvantaged Neighborhoods Lack Access to Parks and Get Less Physical Activity
- The Influence of Community Factors on Health: An Annotated Bibliography, Fall 2004 Developed by PolicyLink, and funded by The California Endowment, this annotated bibliography contains more than 150 entries of research on how community factors affect health. This publication and many other excellent resources on this page: http://www.policylink.org/publicationsByFocus.html
- SF Department of Public Health Program on Health Equity and Sustainability Main page: www.sfdph.org/phes/
- Public Parks and Physical Activity Among Adolescent Girls: http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/reprint/118/5/e1381.pdf
- Inactive America: What Can Parks Do? National Recreation & Park Association
- The Trust for Public Land: Healthy Parks, Healthy Communities initiative.
SOCIAL BENEFITS OF PARKS ECONOMIC BENEFITS OF PARKS PARKS AND QUALITY OF LIFE Above information retrieved November 14, 2008 from http://www.sfnpc.org/benefitsofpark
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Last Updated on Tuesday, 17 February 2009 18:10 |
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